Wal-Mart
tapped charity to ease market entry, critics say in
complaint
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[June 16, 2015]
(Reuters) - A collection of labor
and community groups filed a complaint with the Internal Revenue Service
accusing Wal-Mart Stores Inc's charitable foundation of violating its
tax exempt status by using donations in an attempt to facilitate store
openings in urban areas.
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In the complaint, dated Monday and addressed to IRS Commissioner
John Koskinen, the group claims the Walmart Foundation made
donations to ease public opposition as it sought to expand in key
markets like Los Angeles and New York.
Wal-Mart spokesman Kevin Gardner said the company takes IRS
regulations "very seriously" and the complaint lacked merit.
The group claimed donations spiked around efforts to open stores in
a community. For example, it said donations in Los Angeles jumped to
$1.4 million in 2011 as plans for a new store in Chinatown gathered
steam before dropping off to $230,000 in 2013, the year it opened,
the complaint said.
The complaint alleges the foundation violated IRS regulations by
acting in the interests of a private company and not solely for
charitable aims.
It was signed by 13 groups, including long-time critics like the
union-backed New York Communities for Change which has been active
in pushing for higher worker pay and has campaigned against the
opening of Wal-Mart stores.
"It's sad that groups aligned with professional critics of Walmart,
who are more interested in advancing their own narrow agenda, are
ignoring the millions of people who've benefited from the good works
of the Walmart Foundation over many years," Wal-Mart's Gardner said
in a statement.
Last year Wal-Mart and the foundation gave $1.4 billion in cash and
in-kind donations.
In recent years Wal-Mart has targeted urban areas for growth as it
invests in smaller-format stores. But it has faced public opposition
in cities where community groups fret over the potential impact on
wages and competition with local stores.
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In the 22-page complaint the group also claimed that Wal-Mart was
only soliciting applications from groups that did not put the
company in a negative light.
Phil Hackney, a LSU law professor who previously worked as an IRS
attorney dealing with tax-exempt organizations, said the group would
likely struggle to prove the merits of their complaint.
"Plenty of large businesses set up foundations and they are going to
invest in the community in which they operate. You are just running
in an uphill battle to make the claim that this is somehow out of
the ordinary and different," he said.
(Reporting by Nathan Layne in Chicago; Editing by Christopher
Cushing)
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